К сожалению, точную причину его состояния так и не удалось выяснить😔 Это может быть все, что угодно. Есть подозрения и на «дырку» в желчном или кишечнике, и даже на онкологию. А может и всё вместе собрал, неизвестно.
Вчера ему стало совсем плохо, в течение дня он ухудшался. Вечером пришла хозяйка, они попрощались, теперь у Моти ничего не болит💔
К сожалению, точную причину его состояния так и не удалось выяснить😔 Это может быть все, что угодно. Есть подозрения и на «дырку» в желчном или кишечнике, и даже на онкологию. А может и всё вместе собрал, неизвестно.
Вчера ему стало совсем плохо, в течение дня он ухудшался. Вечером пришла хозяйка, они попрощались, теперь у Моти ничего не болит💔
The Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) had carried out a similar exercise in 2017 in a matter related to circulation of messages through WhatsApp. At the start of 2018, the company attempted to launch an Initial Coin Offering (ICO) which would enable it to enable payments (and earn the cash that comes from doing so). The initial signals were promising, especially given Telegram’s user base is already fairly crypto-savvy. It raised an initial tranche of cash – worth more than a billion dollars – to help develop the coin before opening sales to the public. Unfortunately, third-party sales of coins bought in those initial fundraising rounds raised the ire of the SEC, which brought the hammer down on the whole operation. In 2020, officials ordered Telegram to pay a fine of $18.5 million and hand back much of the cash that it had raised. This provided opportunity to their linked entities to offload their shares at higher prices and make significant profits at the cost of unsuspecting retail investors. The War on Fakes channel has repeatedly attempted to push conspiracies that footage from Ukraine is somehow being falsified. One post on the channel from February 24 claimed without evidence that a widely viewed photo of a Ukrainian woman injured in an airstrike in the city of Chuhuiv was doctored and that the woman was seen in a different photo days later without injuries. The post, which has over 600,000 views, also baselessly claimed that the woman's blood was actually makeup or grape juice. Multiple pro-Kremlin media figures circulated the post's false claims, including prominent Russian journalist Vladimir Soloviev and the state-controlled Russian outlet RT, according to the DFR Lab's report.
from pl